With Tourism, Local Damage Will Be Trumped By Economy

The biggest effect on tourism in New York is the infrastructure damage that will be long term. Long Island was inundated. I live in the second highest area of New York, and the damage here will be
in the millions from fallen trees alone. There is also the short term issue of supplying the boroughs with staple products as many roads are impassable and bridges still closed. Breezy Point ruined.
We live miles away and could smell the smoke of devastation late into the night.

My friend's house was utterly destroyed. Will insurance companies will default on the sheer number of flood
claims? New York City's major attractions: Broadway, Museums along Fifth Avenue, and mid-town are on relatively high ground, so a lot of tourism destinations in terms of Manhattan geography are not
affected. Air travel will recover relatively fast. Mass Transit will not recover as fast because of salt water tunnel flooding, which was a worst case scenario. But tourism tends, again, to be focused
on Manhattan's mid-town, not the other boroughs. Thus, the 2, and 3 and 4 and 5 trains are viable, at the very least.

A federal judge has granted Google's request for an order enjoining Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood from following enforcing a subpoena for “millions” of documents relating to copyright infringement by outside companies. The preliminary injunction, issued on Monday by U.S. District Court Judge Henry Wingate in Jackson, Miss., stays Hood's ...

The Federal Communications Commission voted on Thursday to impose net neutrality rules that prohibit broadband providers from blocking or degrading traffic and from creating online fast lanes. “Today history is being made by a majority of this commission as we vote for a fast, fair and open internet,” Chairman Tom ...

Representatives for a group of young children are appealing a judge's decision to dismiss a lawsuit accusing Google and Viacom of violating a federal video privacy law. The notice of appeal, which was filed this week with the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, doesn't offer details about the potential arguments ...

When approaching multicultural consumer segments, marketers shouldn’t go thinking about “50 Shades of Skin,” according to Xavier Turpin, Director of Multicultural Marketing at Dunkin Brands. “It’s wrong to label all these segments based on skin color,” Turpin told attendees of MediaPost’s Engage: Hispanics conference, on Tuesday. “What’s more important is ...

Programmatic may yield too low cost per thousand prices for many publishers. Still, others who even sell premium video inventory find value. During a OMMA Miami panel, Daren Trousdell, founder/chief executive officer of OneUp Sports says: “Programmatic is a lead-generation tool for us; we can see who is bidding on ...

Audi of America has tapped San Francisco-based MUH-TAY-ZIK | HOF-FER as its social media agency. Audi says it choose the agency Audi after seeing their work for clients like Netflix, Golden State Warriors, and Slavery Footprint.

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler said on Monday that he will propose that the agency declare broadband service a utility, in order to enact “the strongest open internet protections” in the agency's history. “These enforceable, bright-line rules will ban paid prioritization, and the blocking and throttling of lawful content ...

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler said on Monday that he will propose invalidating state restrictions on municipal broadband networks. “Many communities have found that existing private-sector broadband deployment or investment fails to meet their needs,” he said today in a statement. “They should be able to make their own ...

Faced with pressure from lawmakers, Verizon said on Friday that it will allow its mobile customers to opt out of a controversial tracking program. The move means that Verizon's customers will be able to direct the company to stop inserting tracking headers -- known as UIDHs -- into their mobile ...

Karl Greenberg writes about automotive, consumer-packaged-goods, sports, and travel for “Marketing Daily.” Prior to this, he was the automotive editor at "Brandweek" magazine. He was also the Internet advertising technology writer for "Adweek," and petrochemical editor at "Chemical Market Reporter". You can reach Karl at karl@mediapost.com.